by Kelsi Quick, PhD Student in Political Science and a Research Assistant at the European Union Center
Why did the Euromissiles matter? In a brown bag lecture for the European Union Center on September 19, Susan Colbourn answers this question by drawing on new archival documents, public media from the Cold War era, and documents from anti-nuclear campaigns. Colbourn’s book Euromissiles: The Nuclear Weapons that Nearly Destroyed NATO tells the story as a transatlantic history of NATO and the Cold War. Alliance leaders, while concerned about their own countries’ security, nevertheless clearly took public opinion into account in their decision-making.
Colbourn, an associate research professor and associate director of the Program in American Grand Strategy at Duke University, makes more accessible the context behind the Euromissiles and their implications for the time. A central theme Colbourn explores is European anxiety regarding the feasibility of America’s “extended deterrence.” The uncertainty over whether America’s deterrence was enough to safeguard Europe ultimately led to the 1979 decision by NATO to deploy Euromissiles in Europe to counter Soviet usage of SS-20s. Colbourn follows the Carter Administration’s “Dual Track” decision, which aimed to secure reductions in Soviet arms. She details how Germany was resistant towards being the only country hosting Euromissiles, which ultimately led to Italy’s decision to join as a host country of the weapons as well. These deployments, Colbourn explains, were carried out despite mass protests in Europe and the U.S. Eventually, the U.S. and the Soviet Union were able to come to a deal to deescalate and reduce their arms.
Photo by Markian Dobczansky |
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